Eagle Shawn R, Barber Jason, Temkin Nancy, McCrea Michael A, Giacino Joseph T, Okonkwo David O, Madhok Debbie, Yue John K, Zerbato Jennifer M, Manley Geoffrey T, Nelson Lindsay D
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States.
Front Neurol. 2025 Apr 2;16:1558204. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2025.1558204. eCollection 2025.
To evaluate the rates of clinical follow-up and patient interest in clinical follow-up within the first year of traumatic brain injury (TBI) with presenting Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score between 13 and 15.
This is a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study which enrolled patients with TBI first evaluated at a 1 of 23 level 1 trauma centers ( = 1,916). At 2 weeks and 3 months, the participants were asked "have you seen any healthcare provider for your TBI?" and "if so, did it help?." Participants also completed the Rivermead Post-Concussion Questionnaire (RPQ), Quality of Life after Brain Injury- Overall Scale (QOLIBRI-OS), and Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended for TBI (GOSE-TBI) at 2 weeks, 3-, 6-, and 12-months. Persistent symptoms were defined as 3+ symptoms worse than pre-injury levels. QOLIBRI-OS≤51 was defined as lower quality of life. GOSE<8 was defined as incomplete recovery.
By 2 weeks, 43% of participants had followed up with a clinical provider; cumulative follow-up within the first year was 63%. Overall, 61% of participants interested in clinical follow-up care reported receiving clinical follow-up care. Participants who received follow-up care reported that it helped at an 86% rate. Of those not interested in follow-up care, 42% reported receiving clinical follow-up care and 86% of those receiving care reported that it helped. Approximately 44% of participants who reported "I did not think I need follow-up" at 2 weeks had incomplete recovery (GOSE<8), 40% had persistent symptoms, and 19% had lower quality of life at 12-months post-injury.
Participants not interested in follow-up care had high rates of poor functional recovery, persistent symptoms and lower quality-of-life at 12 months following traumatic brain injury with GCS 13-15. Education and provider emphasis on the importance of clinical follow-up after hospital discharge with TBI need to be enhanced. Prioritizing timely clinical follow-up for adult patients with TBI with GCS 13 to 15 is critical for improving rates of long-term recovery in this population.
评估创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后第一年的临床随访率以及患者对临床随访的兴趣,这些患者初次就诊时格拉斯哥昏迷量表(GCS)评分为13至15分。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究的二次分析,该研究纳入了在23个一级创伤中心之一首次接受评估的TBI患者(n = 1,916)。在2周和3个月时,询问参与者“你因TBI看过任何医疗服务提供者吗?”以及“如果看过,有帮助吗?”。参与者还在2周、3个月、6个月和12个月时完成了Rivermead脑震荡后问卷(RPQ)、脑损伤后生活质量-总体量表(QOLIBRI-OS)以及TBI扩展格拉斯哥预后量表(GOSE-TBI)。持续症状定义为比受伤前水平严重3种及以上症状。QOLIBRI-OS≤51定义为生活质量较低。GOSE<8定义为恢复不完全。
到2周时,43%的参与者接受了临床服务提供者的随访;第一年的累积随访率为63%。总体而言,对临床随访护理感兴趣的参与者中有61%报告接受了临床随访护理。接受随访护理的参与者报告有帮助的比例为86%。在对随访护理不感兴趣的参与者中,42%报告接受了临床随访护理,其中86%报告有帮助。在受伤后12个月时,约44%在2周时报告“我认为我不需要随访”的参与者恢复不完全(GOSE<8),40%有持续症状,19%生活质量较低。
在GCS评分为13 - 15分的创伤性脑损伤患者中,对随访护理不感兴趣的参与者在受伤后12个月时功能恢复差、持续症状和生活质量较低的发生率较高。需要加强对出院后TBI临床随访重要性的教育及服务提供者的重视。对GCS评分为13至15分的成年TBI患者优先进行及时的临床随访对于提高该人群的长期恢复率至关重要。